TRAFFIC. MALAYSIA S INVISIBLE IVORY CHANNEL An assessment of ivory seizures involving Malaysia from January May 2014

Size: px
Start display at page:

Download "TRAFFIC. MALAYSIA S INVISIBLE IVORY CHANNEL An assessment of ivory seizures involving Malaysia from January May 2014"

Transcription

1 TRAFFIC R E P O R T SEPTEMBER 2016 MALAYSIA S INVISIBLE IVORY CHANNEL An assessment of ivory seizures involving Malaysia from January May 2014 Kanitha Krishnasamy 1

2 TRAFFIC REPORT TRAFFIC, the wild life trade monitoring net work, is the leading non-governmental organization working globally on trade in wild animals and plants in the context of both biodiversity conservation and sustainable development. TRAFFIC is a strategic alliance of WWF and IUCN. Reprod uction of material appearing in this report requires written permission from the publisher. The designations of geographical entities in this publication, and the presentation of the material, do not imply the expression of any opinion whatsoever on the part of TRAFFIC or its supporting organizations con cern ing the legal status of any country, territory, or area, or of its authorities, or concerning the delimitation of its frontiers or boundaries. The views of the authors expressed in this publication are those of the writers and do not necessarily reflect those of TRAFFIC, WWF or IUCN. Published by TRAFFIC. Southeast Asia Regional Office Unit 3-2, 1st Floor, Jalan SS23/11 Taman SEA, Petaling Jaya Selangor, Malaysia Telephone : (603) Fax : (603) Copyright of material published in this report is vested in TRAFFIC. TRAFFIC ISBN no: UK Registered Charity No Suggested citation: Krishnasamy, K. (2016). Malaysia s invisible ivory channel: An assessment of ivory seizures involving Malaysia from January 2003-May TRAFFIC, Southeast Asia Regional Office, Petaling Jaya, Selangor, Malaysia. Front cover photograph: Seizure of ivory in 2011 in Malaysia Credit: Kanitha Krishnasamy/TRAFFIC

3 MALAYSIA S INVISIBLE IVORY CHANNEL An assessment of ivory seizures involving Malaysia from January May 2014 Kanitha Krishnasamy Seizure of ivory in 2011 in Malaysia Kanitha Krishnasamy/TRAFFIC

4 4

5 TABLE OF CONTENTS Executive Summary v Introduction 1 Methods 9 Analysis and Discussion Malaysia s role 10 Seizures made in Malaysia 11 Seizures made outside Malaysia 13 Origins and destination of seizures made outside Malaysia 16 Seaports and Airports 16 Conclusion 20 References 23 ii

6 LISTS OF TABLES AND FIGURES List of Tables Table 1 Summary statistics for the ETIS cluster analysis groups, Table 2 Timeline of notable incidents Table 3 Summary evaluation of Malaysia s progress towards actions in its National Ivory Action Plan Table 4 Summary of seizure data implicating Malaysia from Table 5 Summary of seizures made prior to reaching Malaysia and after passing Malaysia, Table 6 Total weight of ivory seized in 17 exports originating from Kenya, Tanzania and Uganda Table 7 Large-scale seizures involving reported country of destination Table 8 Ivory seizures at airports, implicating Malaysia List of Figures Figure 1 Illustration of ivory trade patterns involving Malaysia from Figure 2 Trade routes for large-scale (>500 kg) seizures of ivory from Figure 3 Trade routes for large-scale (>500 kg) seizures of ivory from Figure 4 Trade routes for large-scale (>500 kg) seizures of ivory from Figure 5 Malaysia s role in the global ivory trade Figure 6 Comparison of number of seizures and volume of seized ivory from within and outside Malaysia Figure 7 Timeline showing ivory seizures in Malaysia from Figure 8 Comparison between seizures occurring before and after 2009 Figure 9 Seizures of ivory made outside Malaysia but where Malaysia was part of the trade chain, by weight and year Figure 10 Volume of ivory seized by other countries/territories where Malaysia is implicated, from Figure 11 Countries/territories that made large-scale seizures implicating Malaysia from and the total weight seized (kg) Figure 12 Peninsular Malaysia s seaports and the three ports in which ivory seizures took place iii

7 ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS Thanks to colleagues at TRAFFIC in Southeast Asia, in particular Chris Shepherd, Sarah Stoner, and Elizabeth John for feedback and review of this report. Aqeela Abdul Jalil is thanked for her patience in report layout and designing the infographics and maps used in this report. Tom Milliken is thanked for providing very useful comments. Richard Thomas, Sabri Zain and Louisa Sangalakula from TRAFFIC are also thanked. The author is grateful to the Department of Wildlife and National Parks Peninsular Malaysia and the Royal Malaysian Customs for generously providing information on seizures and law enforcement. The British High Commission in Malaysia generously supported this study. The author also thanks the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Services for supporting some of the time leading to the production of this work. iv

8 EXECUTIVE SUMMARY Malaysia does not have an open domestic ivory market, unlike at least seven other Southeast Asian countries. However, its position in the global illicit ivory trade has become more prominent since 2009 when its role as a principal transit gateway for ivory en route to consumer markets in other Southeast and East Asian countries emerged. This occurrence has made Malaysia the world s paramount illicit ivory transit country, according to data in the Elephant Trade Information System (ETIS), which tracks ivory seizures globally since The ETIS report to the 62 nd CITES Standing Committee meeting in July 2012 identified Malaysia as one of eight countries most heavily implicated in the illegal ivory trade chain. Malaysia was the only country that served as purely a transit country among this group of African source and Asian end-use nations. To better understand this trade dynamic, TRAFFIC assessed information from ivory seizures from a period of over 11 years (nearly 11 and a half years), from January 2003 to May 2014 all seizures were either made by Malaysian authorities, or made outside the country, but with Malaysia identified as part of the trade chain. Findings highlight that a total of 66 ivory seizures have been connected to Malaysia, cumulatively recording kg of ivory over this period. Although only 26 of all seizures were large-scale seizures (>500 kg), these alone logged in a total weight of kg, accounting for 95% of the total volume seized. This report discusses some insights from the seizures over this period, as well as highlighting needs and opportunities in order for Malaysia to remove itself from its current position as a country of international concern for illicit trade in ivory under CITES. For its part, Malaysia has made a total of 19 seizures from January 2003 February 2013 totalling close to 15 tonnes of ivory. Five of these, representing 94% of total volume seized in the country, were large-scale seizures, one of which represents the third largest seizure in ETIS. The large-scale seizures in Malaysia occurred in all three of the nation s leading seaports: Ports of Klang, Pasir Gudang and Penang. However, based on seizures made outside Malaysia during the assessed period, Malaysia has been implicated in at least 47 other seizures, involving more than 48 tonnes of ivory that had already passed through a Malaysian port undetected or was destined for the country. A vast majority of these were raw ivory, with only a small proportion being worked ivory that had already passed through a Malaysian port undetected or was destined for the country. This occurrence is the primary reason Malaysia has been identified as a key transit country in the global ivory trade. These seizures involve the import, export and re-export of ivory (and other prohibited wildlife parts) from at least 23 known countries and territories around the world, at various points of the trade route. Almost 75% (n=35) of these 47 seizures were made by other countries after the shipment passed a Malaysian port unstopped, amounting to kg of ivory. Seventeen of the 47 seizures originated from Kenya, Tanzania and Uganda the three major exit points for the world s illegal elephant ivory trade. These three countries alone exported 66% ( kg) of the total volume of ivory seized during this period involving Malaysia, with Kenya and Tanzania each moving more than 13 tonnes of ivory. Tanzania s role in moving large quantities of ivory through Malaysia has been documented since at least 2003, while the other two became more prominent since From all the seizures involving Malaysia as a transit or destination country, kg of ivory from 13 seizures occurred in 2013 alone the highest annual record over the 12-year period. Seven of these 13 seizures took place in the month of October, amounting to more than 8000 kg of ivory. At least 23 rhino horns were also trafficked along with the ivory between August 2010 and December 2013, with 15 horns seized in a single shipment from Uganda. In two of these shipments involving 20 rhino horns from Kenya and Uganda, Malaysia was listed as the country of destination. v

9 Outside this study period, between April 2015 and August 2015, four other seizures by Australia, Kenya, Thailand and Viet Nam have been reported. These involved more than 5 tonnes of ivory that had either passed through Malaysia or listed Malaysia as the country of destination. Such occurrences serve to reinforce that Malaysian ports continue to be used to move large quantities of ivory, and more concerning, appears to becoming more frequent at a time when the poaching of African Elephants is at its most critical level. Not a single arrest or prosecution occurred with respect to any Malaysian ivory seizure during the assessed period. However two prosecutions occurred in 2015, outside the assessed period. Malaysia s geographical proximity to the world s major ivory consumers China and Thailand and its efficient and well-developed port infrastructure, which ranks amongst the world s most elite ports, are important factors behind the country being used to smuggle ivory repeatedly. Although the sheer quantity, volume and speed of cargo moving through Malaysia s major seaports involving tens of millions of containers each year makes the detection of illicit ivory shipments extremely challenging, it is not an insurmountable task. Collaborative action, including risk profiling and targeting, as well as timely communication between source and consumer countries have already resulted in a number of successful seizures globally, and indeed forms part of Malaysia s National Ivory Action Plan that was submitted to CITES pursuant to the recommendations of the CITES Standing Committee. Such measures must continue, conducted in tandem with other essential actions, without which Malaysia will continue to be a prominent player in the illegal ivory trade. Intelligence-led investigations, collaborative action and timely communication between source and consumer countries have already proven positive results in a number of cases globally. This must be enhanced in Malaysia. Malaysia was listed as country of export in at least two large-scale seizures made by Viet Nam, while a further six seizures that took place from 2010 to 2013 reported Malaysia as the country of destination. As Malaysia does not possess a domestic ivory market, this is likely a case of cargo being offloaded in Malaysia and then re-exported to disguise the fact that the cargo originated in Africa. Such cases suggest that criminal operatives believe that they can successfully evade control mechanisms in Malaysia and addressing this issue should be a priority for government authorities at both air and seaports. Given that smuggling across continents involves organized criminality, risk indicators and profiling are crucial, and are currently being employed by the Royal Malaysian Customs to detect high-risk shipments at both seaports and airports, the latter of which are increasingly being used, globally, to smuggle ivory. At least four of the known confiscations in Malaysia were made at airports. In 2015, Malaysian authorities recorded at least two arrests (involving three individuals) and convictions involving ivory seizures made at one of the country s international airports, Kuala Lumpur International Airport (KLIA). Offenders were penalised a cumulative fine of USD Additionally, the Royal Malaysian Customs made two seizures in February 2016, seizing 159 kg of ivory and arrested two Vietnamese nationals; investigations are ongoing. More recently, in July 2016, Malaysian Customs seized a shipment of ivory from the Democratic Republic of Congo weighing just over 1000 kg. Efforts that led to these arrests must be bolstered, conducted concurrently with other actions identified earlier including the implementation and maintenance of a stockpile management system and DNA forensic analysis through partnerships with capable laboratories, to determine the provenance of smuggled ivory. Malaysia does not have a domestic ivory market like others in the region. Therefore, its prospect of removing itself from the current position on the global stage of the illegal ivory trade is possibly easier compared to the other export and consumer countries, but only if concerted effort is made to address wildlife trafficking issues as they relate to a transit country. vi

10 INTRODUCTION The African Elephant Loxodonta africana is currently facing a crisis unlike anything witnessed since the 1980s. A recent assessment of site-specific poaching data generated by the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Wild Fauna and Flora (CITES) MIKE (Monitoring Illegal Killing of Elephants) programme estimated that elephants had been killed throughout Africa over the three-year period (Wittemyer et al., 2014). Such killing follows a significant increase in the global ivory trade, largely fuelled by resurgent demand in Asia, especially China. As of 15 February 2016, over ivory seizures have been recorded globally since 1989 in ETIS, with 2013 recording a record of over 65 tonnes of seized ivory (T. Milliken, pers, comm., 2016). Both African and Asian Elephants Elephas maximus are listed in Appendix I of the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora (CITES), with the exception of populations of African Elephants from four countries (Bostwana, Namibia, South Africa and Zimbabwe). Regardless of these CITES listings, all commercial international trade in elephant ivory has been banned since 1990 except under exceptional circumstances. Malaysia became a Party to CITES in It has since passed strong laws to protect wildlife, predominantly through the Wildlife Protection Act 2010 (WCA) for domestic wildlife protection in Peninsular Malaysia. International wildlife trade is governed by the International Trade in Endangered Species Act 2008 (INTESA), Malaysia s CITES-implementing legislation. Violation of these two laws, if convicted, carries a maximum fine of up to MYR (USD ) and MYR one million (USD ), or up to five or seven years in jail, respectively. The Customs Prohibition of Import and Export Orders 2012, which came into force in March 2013, aligns Malaysia s CITES Act with the provisions of the Customs Act. This legal development effectively empowers Customs to control the import and export of wildlife. Notably, the strongest legal framework to combat organized crime, including ivory trafficking through Malaysia, was established in November 2014, when the government recognized violations under the WCA and the INTESA as serious offences in the Second Schedule of the Anti-Money Laundering and Anti-terrorism Financing Act (Amendment) This law carries a fine of MYR Five million (almost USD1.6 million) or imprisonment of up to five years, upon conviction. Offenders may also be convicted for attempting to engage in, or abetting the commission of, money laundering, irrespective of whether there is a conviction for a serious offence or foreign serious offence or that a prosecution has been initiated for the commission of a serious offence or foreign serious offence. A foreign serious offence is an offence against the law of a foreign State issued by, or on behalf of, the government of that foreign State. Despite strong legislation being in place and an absence of a domestic ivory market, Malaysia became closely associated with global ivory trafficking when the country was implicated in an ongoing suite of international ivory seizures. The Elephant Trade Information System (ETIS) The fifth major assessment of the ETIS data for the 16 th meeting of the Conference of the Parties to CITES (CITES CoP16) in 2013 underscored the significant role of Malaysia in the global ivory trade. ETIS is a comprehensive CITES-mandated system, managed by TRAFFIC, that tracks illegal trade in elephant specimens globally. The ETIS seizure data comprises the world s largest collection of law enforcement records on illegal trade in elephant products, holding data from some 100 countries or territories since 1989 (CITES, 2013). As of February 2016, there were seizures recorded in ETIS, of which records represented ivory seizures, whilst the remainder comprised non-ivory elephant products (T. Milliken, pers. comm., 2016). ETIS not only records seizure information that is verified by governments, but the system is also able to analyse law enforcement effort, drivers of illegal trade and assess trends and changes in the levels of illegal trade in ivory over time. Due to the covert nature in which trafficking occurs, the raw seizure data 1

11 are not representative of the true magnitude of the illegal trade in ivory as much of the trade goes undetected or is unreported to ETIS. However, ETIS analyses are based on bias-adjusted data that correct for varying rates of seizure and rates of reporting between and within countries over time. This is done to provide relative smoothed trends that are a reliable picture of the scale of ivory trafficking and highlight those countries that are most implicated in the illicit trade chains behind the greatest volumes of ivory involved. Analysis of seizure data therefore provides a credible basis for assessing trade in elephant parts and products for any country in the world, including Malaysia. An excerpt of the 2013 ETIS analysis and the role of primary countries of concern facilitating illegal ivory trade in the region, including Malaysia, is summarized in Table 1. Table 1: Summary statistics for the ETIS cluster analysis groups, Frequency Scale Law Enforcement (LE) Effort Efficiency Organized Crime Countries or Territories Mean no. of seizures Mean weight (kg) Mean LE ratio (from 0.00: no LE effort, to 1.00: best LE effort) Percentage of large-scale ivory seizures to mean eight (high values indicate organized criminality) TH 53 10, MY, PH, VN 26 16, CN 2,008 28, Source: CITES 2013 Legend: CN (China); MY (Malaysia); PH (Philippines); TH (Thailand); VN (Viet Nam); Using an analytical technique called cluster analysis, which groups countries that share similar characteristics in terms of their involvement in illicit ivory trade, three Southeast Asian countries Malaysia, the Philippines and Viet Nam together formed a distinctive cluster in the ETIS analysis to CITES CoP 16 (Table 1). These countries formed a group of primary concern, in that although the number of seizures was relatively small, they collectively were part of trade chains through which the second largest flow of illicit ivory moved. As large-scale movements of ivory are the hallmark of higher levels of crime, the ivory trade in these countries displayed the highest values for the presence of organized crime. With no domestic ivory market of its own, Malaysia is unique amongst this group as being a country exclusively facilitating the transit of ivory, with the majority of shipments being seized en route to, or having already passed through the country. Organized criminal operatives are known for changing and adapting trade routes and methods to circumvent detection, and beginning in 2009, an increasing number of ivory shipments were observed to be routed through Southeast Asia, particularly Malaysia. It was at this time that Malaysia s role in this trade was first identified (Milliken et al., 2009; Milliken et al., 2013). Shipments originating from the Tanzanian ports of Dar es Salaam and Zanzibar, for example, were initially directed to Malaysia and two other countries as the principal transit country (Blanc et al., 2013). Trade out of Kenya also developed during this period with multiple shipments transiting Malaysia and then moving on to Viet Nam, Cambodia, Thailand and China (Figure 1). 2

12 Figure 1: Illustration of ivory trade patterns involving Malaysia from Source: TRAFFIC Source: TRAFFIC Seizure data show that Malaysia progressively became the principal transit gateway, from where African-sourced ivory was then redirected elsewhere in the region, particularly to Viet Nam, Hong Kong and China. When compared to trade patterns observed in the period , this appears to represent a change in smuggling routes when Malaysia s role in the trade was minimal. Figures 2, 3 and 4 provide an illustration of the trend in ivory trafficking during three notable periods, giving emphasis to the role Malaysia plays. Seizure of 492 tusks in Port Klang, Malaysia in January 2012 Kanitha Krishnasamy/TRAFFIC 3

13 Figure 2: Trade routes for large-scale (>500 kg) seizures of ivory from Source: Adapted from CITES, IUCN and TRAFFIC,

14 Figure 3: Trade routes for large-scale (>500 kg) seizures of ivory from Source: Adapted from CITES, IUCN and TRAFFIC,

15 Figure 4: Trade routes for large-scale (>500 kg) seizures of ivory from Source: Adapted from CITES, IUCN and TRAFFIC,

16 Since 2009, a series of other occurrences has drawn attention to Malaysia s position in the global ivory trade (Table 2). Following the 62 nd meeting of the CITES Standing Committee in July 2012, nine countries and territories most heavily implicated in illegal ivory trade, were asked to submit written reports to the CITES Secretariat on their implementation of CITES requirements for ivory trade before 1 January 2013 (CITES, 2016; Milliken, 2013). This includes Hong Kong as a Special Administrative Region of China which implements CITES separately from mainland China. These nine countries and territories comprise principal end-use markets (China and Thailand), export countries (Kenya, Tanzania and Uganda) and transit countries/territories (Malaysia, Hong Kong, the Philippines and Viet Nam). Of the four transit countries/territories, Malaysia is the only one without a domestic ivory market or a history of ivory manufacturing. Malaysia, Viet Nam and Tanzania did not submit the required written report in accordance with the deadline, while the Philippines, Uganda and Kenya only produced reports and letters shortly before the commencement of the CITES CoP16 in March The lack of urgent response from the world s most significant ivory trading countries did not go unnoticed and served to support the introduction of a higher degree of accountability. Subsequent deliberations at CITES CoP16 (particularly at the 63 rd and 64 th meetings of the CITES Standing Committee) and the push for stronger measures by those heavily implicated in this trade resulted in an unprecedented decision: the eight countries plus Hong Kong were mandated to submit National Ivory Action Plans that included time-bound commitments to address and resolve serious issues which facilitated illicit trade in ivory. Table 2: Timeline of notable incidents When Summary of incidents 2009 Malaysia s transit role in the illegal ivory trade highlighted in the ETIS report to CITES CoP15 (13 25 March 2010). Jul nd Standing Committee meeting (23 27 July 2012); countries and territories identified as involved in substantial illegal ivory trade as a source, transit or destination country were requested to submit written reports before Jan 2013 on their implementation of Resolution Conf requirements for ivory trade for consideration by the Standing Committee. Nov 2012 CITES Secretariat wrote to the countries concerned, reminding them of the recommendations of the Standing Committee and inviting them to submit their written reports. Nov 2012 CITES Secretariat invited the Permanent Missions of the eight Parties in Geneva to a special briefing on the issue; Malaysia was a participant. Jan 2013 Malaysia did not submit its ivory trade report by the deadline for the submission of documents for consideration by the Standing Committee at its 63 rd meeting (i.e. 1 January 2013) as requested at the 62 nd Standing Committee meeting. Mar 2013 Malaysia and three other countries were asked at the 63 rd meeting of the Standing Committee (2 March 2013) to provide a verbal update concerning their ivory trade controls as well as an explanation for not submitting the requested report by the agreed deadline. Malaysia was also identified as a country of primary concern in the ETIS analysis that was presented at CoP16. Mar 2013 The 64 th meeting of the Standing Committee (14 March 2013) mandated Malaysia and nine other countries and territories to submit detailed National Ivory Action Plans before July May 2013 Malaysia submits a National Ivory Action Plan to the CITES Secretariat. Jul 2014 All National Ivory Action Plans were presented and assessed at the 65th meeting of the CITES Standing Committee (7 11 July 2014) and all relevant Parties were urged to continue implementation process. 7

17 Progress on the actions taken by the nine countries and territories against their National Ivory Action Plans was assessed at the 65 th meeting of the Standing Committee in July 2014, which outlined a wide range of measures and activities. The CITES Secretariat s evaluation of the nine National Ivory Action Plans indicated that over 65% of the actions (80 of 121) were either substantially achieved or were on track for achievement (CITES, 2014b). The CITES Secretariat further noted that particular progress had been made by Malaysia on a number of actions, with progress on a number of others being unclear (CITES, 2014). A summary evaluation of Malaysia s progress on its Action Plan is provided in Table 3. Table 3: Summary evaluation of Malaysia s progress towards actions in its National Ivory Action Plan Category Substantially achieved On track Challenging Unclear 1. Legislation and regulations 2. National-level enforcement action, investigation and inter-agency co-ordination 3. International enforcement collaboration 4. Outreach, public awareness and education 5. Additional priority activities Source: CITES, Capacity building for ivory identification and other techniques. 2.2 Enforcement activity at entry and exit points 2.1 Local interagency collaboration 4.1 International demand reduction campaign 5.2 Wildlife enforcement capacity building 5.4 Stockpile management 3.1 Regional collaborations 3.2 International collaborations 5.4 Ivory Identification 4.2 Public awareness- raising activities 5.1 Forensic technology 5.3 Additional investigation tools This paper provides an overview of ivory seizures involving Malaysia, underlining its role in the global ivory trade. The analysis of seizure data is discussed below, highlighting needs and opportunities in order for Malaysia to remove itself from its current position as a country of international concern for ivory trade under CITES. 8

18 METHODS Information on ivory seizures made by Malaysian authorities, as well as seizures made outside the country which implicate Malaysia in the trade chain over an 11-year period from 1 January May 2014, have been compiled and considered in this analysis. Seizure data were gathered primarily from open source articles published by the media on government actions, government records, as well as peer-reviewed reports. Efforts were taken to verify media reports (with the relevant law enforcement agencies, including Royal Malaysian Customs). Information on seizures included date of seizure, countries involved, location of seizure, type of ivory item seized (raw tusks or worked ivory), the weight and number of ivory items seized all of which allowed for data analysis. It is assumed that seizures analysed herein represent only a proportion of the actuality of illegal trade as not all illegal trade is intercepted and/or reported. Both Hong Kong and Taiwan are treated independently in this analysis, consistent in the manner they are treated in the ETIS analysis to CITES CoPs. Seizures of 500 kg of ivory or more have been recognized by CITES as large-scale ivory seizures, which are indicative of organized criminality. Where weight information from seizures was not recorded, a notional 1 kg is used to enable a minimum weight to be accounted for in the analysis. Information, such as locations of seizures, routes used and other such trends are analysed here, and reasons why Malaysia was used as a transit point in this illicit trade are explored. A conversion rate of USD1 to MYR3.2 is used as at May 2014 ( converter/) Ivory seized in Port Klang in 2011 Kanitha Krishnasamy/TRAFFIC 9

19 ANALYSIS AND DISCUSSION Malaysia s role During the 11-year period assessed by this report, smugglers have increasingly used Malaysian ports to move illicit ivory shipments to consumer markets. This conclusion is based upon either: i) seizures made in Malaysia, ii): shipments that have passed through Malaysian ports undetected, both by air and sea, or iii): shipments destined for the country based on shipment documentation. As a result, Malaysia has found itself firmly on the global map of ivory trade as a major transit hub, with a total of 66 illicit shipments being linked to the country during the assessed period, totalling kg of ivory (Table 4). Of these, 27 cases were large-scale seizures of more than 500 kg, with a total weight recorded of kg, or 96% of the total volume seized. Figure 5 illustrates Malaysia s role in this trade. Figure 5: Malaysia s role in the global ivory trade Source: TRAFFIC Table 4 provides a summary of the number of seizures and weight of ivory seized from implicating Malaysia. At least 70% of these seizures, involving a correspondingly high quantity of seized ivory occurred outside Malaysia (Figure 5). This represents more than three times the amount of ivory that was intercepted in Malaysia. This is the primary reason Malaysia was highlighted as the world s foremost transit gateway for illicit ivory. Over the period, a total of kg of ivory has been seized globally (ETIS, 25 January 2016; T. Milliken, pers. Comm., 2016). The weight of ivory seized involving Malaysia alone therefore represents 19% of the total weight of ivory seized globally. 10

20 Table 4: Summary of seizure data implicating Malaysia from Total number of seizures Total weight (kg) No of large-scale (>500 kg) ivory seizures Within Malaysia Outside Malaysia * Total * A breakdown of seizures made before reaching Malaysia, and after passing Malaysia is provided in Table 5 Weight of largescale (>500 kg) ivory seizures Figure 6: Comparison of number of seizures and volume of seized ivory from within and outside Malaysia 29% No of seizures in Malaysia 23% Weight of large-scale (>500kg) ivory seizures in Malaysia 71% No of seizures outside Malaysia 77% Weight of large-scale (>500kg) ivory seizures outside Malaysia Apart from the significance of the quantity of ivory seizures, in three of the 46 shipments, at least 23 rhino horns were trafficked along with the ivory. These shipments originated from Uganda in December 2013 (15 rhino horns), Nigeria in February 2011 (three rhino horns) and Kenya in August 2010 (five rhino horns). The shipments from Kenya and Uganda listed Malaysia as the end destination, while the Nigerian shipment was headed to Thailand. In a separate shipment from Uganda, pangolin scales were also found. Large-scale ivory shipments are also being mixed with quantities of rhino horns, alongside other protected wildlife such as pangolins. Only 10 suspects were reportedly arrested in connection with the ivory seizures described in this report, and none of the arrests occurred in Southeast Asia: Two Chinese nationals and two Guinean nationals were arrested in Uganda in A Chinese national was arrested at Harare International Airport in Zimbabwe in Three men were arrested on two occasions in Hong Kong in 2010 and Two suspects were arrested in Kenya in Seizures made in Malaysia From January 2003 February 2014, Malaysia made 19 ivory seizures, totalling almost 15 tonnes that originated from three countries: Kenya, Tanzania and Togo (Figure 7). Five of these were large-scale consignments of over 500 kg each. The most recent of all large-scale seizures in Malaysia occurred in December 2012, weighing 6043 kg and comprising 2341 pieces of tusks. This shipment originated from Togo and represents the third largest seizure ever recorded in ETIS. 11

21 Figure 7: Timeline showing ivory seizures in Malaysia from Source: TRAFFIC 12

22 Port Klang Customs makes Malaysia s largest ivory seizure in December 2012, arriving from Togo Elizabeth John/TRAFFIC Seizures made outside Malaysia The primary reason Malaysia has emerged as the world s paramount transit gateway for illicit ivory is the number of large-scale ivory seizures that use the country as part of an illicit pathway from Africa to Asian end-use markets. Malaysia s role in this trade chain first emerged in 2006, but grew to be more prominent in An examination of seizure records since 2009, compared to those of previous years, emphasises the increasing degree of Malaysia s involvement as a transit country in this trade (Figure 8). Over 93% of seizures that implicate Malaysia over this period (44 of 47) have occurred since the beginning of 2009, attesting to Malaysia s prominent position as a transit country in the trade in recent years. Forty percent of these 44 seizures and, more worryingly, 80% of the total weight seized were from large-scale ivory seizures, indicating the involvement of organized criminal networks. No seizures were reported between August 2006 and December Figure 8: Comparison between seizures occurring before and after 2009 Weight (kg) No of seizures: No of seizures: Year Year Figure 8 provides a more detailed illustration on the scale of seizures that have occurred annually outside Malaysia from and clearly shows the increased frequency of Malaysia s involvement in the global ivory trade. Within this period, a total of 47 seizures took place, totalling kg, involving at least 23 countries. Half of these were large-scale ivory seizures, each weighing between 769 kg 5647 kg. The highest number of seizures (13) occurred in 2013, with six of these occurring in a single month (October) (Figure 9). This trend reinforces the fact that Malaysia remains a major port of call for smuggled ivory. Six of the 13 seizures in 2013 were large-scale, with four of these occurring in October; Viet Nam made two of these seizures within a span of five days, totalling over 4000 kg of ivory. The high quantitiesof ivory seized with such frequency is alarming and certainly suggests organized criminal involvement. 13

23 Figure 9: Seizures of ivory made outside Malaysia but where Malaysia was part of the trade chain, by weight and year Volume of seizures (kg) No of Seizures Total min weight of seized ivory (kg) Total no of seizures by year Of the 47 seizures made outside Malaysia, 10 were made at the point of export by four African nations (Kenya, Tanzania, Uganda and Zimbabwe), including six that took place in 2013 alone. Kenya and Uganda made a total of four seizures each. Six of the 10 seizures were large-scale (each seizure weighing between kg). With the exception of the US seizing one piece of worked ivory that was being shipped to Malaysia, the remaining 35 seizures were made by other transit or end-use destinations, after having passed through Malaysia. Of significance is the fact that 74% of the seizures were made by other countries after the ivory shipments passed a Malaysian port (Table 5). Of these, although only 15 seizures were large-scale, the high volume of over 70% (of the total weight of large-scale seizure) is concerning. Fourteen of the seizures made after passing Malaysia involved small items of worked ivory. Table 5: Summary of seizures made prior to reaching Malaysia and after passing Malaysia, Total number of seizures % of total number of seizures Total weight seized (kg) % of total weight seized (kg) No of largescale (>500 kg) ivory seizures Weight of large-scale (>500 kg) ivory seizures % Weight of large-scale (>500 kg) ivory seizures Before reaching Malaysia After passing Malaysia Total Hong Kong made the most number of seizures of ivory that had already passed through Malaysia, followed by Australia and China, although the seizures by the latter two countries were minor quantities of worked ivory (Figure 10). Therefore, a high number of seizures does not always correspond with high levels of organized criminality, but includes elements of consumer purchases. For example, seizures made by Australia and China were personal effects of very small volumes 14

24 (less than 5 kg), and therefore not directly comparable to the roles of countries or territories making seizure of much higher volumes, like Hong Kong and Viet Nam seizures made by these two were large-scale, signifying a higher degree of organized criminality. Figure 10: Volume of ivory seized by other countries/territories where Malaysia is implicated from (kg) HK (CN) VN KE UG TW TW(CN) KH JP TZ TH AE ZW CN AU US ID 0 Weight No of seizures Legend: AE (United Arab Emirates); AU (Australia); CN (China); HK (Hong Kong); ID (Indonesia); JP (Japan); KE (Kenya); KH (Cambodia); TH (Thailand); TW (Taiwan); TZ (Tanzania); UG (Uganda); US (United States); VN (Viet Nam); ZW (Zimbabwe). The weight of ivory seized by Hong Kong, Viet Nam, Kenya and Uganda unequivocally calls attention to them being most closely associated with large-scale ivory shipments passing through Malaysia. These four countries/territories, alongside five others, collectively made all the large-scale seizures of ivory implicating Malaysia, reaching a total of kg (Figure 11). By region, East Asia made the highest number of seizures, recording a correspondingly high volume, followed by Southeast Asia and Africa. Figure 11: Countries/territories that made large-scale seizures implicating Malaysia from , and the total weight seized (kg) HK HK (CN) VN KE UG TW TW(CN) KH JP TZ TH Legend: HK (Hong Kong) (China); JP (Japan); KE (Kenya); KH (Cambodia); TH (Thailand); TW (Taiwan); TZ (Tanzania); UG (Uganda); VN (Viet Nam). 15

25 Origins and destination of seizures made outside Malaysia A total of 13 countries of origin or export were identified in the data. Surprisingly, Malaysia was listed as the country of export in 15 seizures although a majority of these were personal effects only two were large-scale seizures of over 2000 kg each; both made by Viet Nam at the Hai Phong port in 2013 within a five-day period. It is unknown if the ivory in all of these cases actually entered Malaysia and was then re-exported to the country of destination, or if this is based upon information from shipping documents only and Malaysia was simply the last port of call for the vessel carrying the shipment. Seventeen of all seizures originated from Kenya, Tanzania and Uganda. These three source/export countries are also among the nine countries / territories of primary concern identified by CITES. The quantity of ivory originating from these three African countries alone accounted for 66% of the total volume of ivory ( kg of kg) involving Malaysia that was seized outside of the country during this period, with Kenya and Tanzania each moving more than 13 tonnes of ivory (Table 6). Six of these seizures, totalling 9523 kg of ivory, took place from 2010 to 2013 and reported Malaysia as the country of destination (import). All but two of these were large-scale seizures, each recording a minimum of 1500 kg. Table 6: Total weight of ivory seized in 17 exports originating from Kenya, Tanzania and Uganda Country Total minimum estimated weight (kg) Kenya Tanzania Uganda 3520 Total Information analysed during this period shows that the top three countries/territories listed as destinations for ivory shipments were Malaysia, China and Hong Kong. These three countries /territories were listed in at least 29 shipments totalling kg, with Malaysia contributing kg in 10 shipments to this total. Sixteen of these were large-scale seizures (Table 7). There is no further information concerning whether this ivory was to be re-exported elsewhere, but reexportation is assumed in the case for Malaysia as there is no domestic ivory market or internal ivory processing in the country. Table 7: Large-scale seizures involving reported country of destination Country/Territory No of seizures Weight (kg) % of weight Malaysia Hong Kong China Total Seaports and Airports Large-scale seizures in Malaysia have occurred in all three of the nation s leading seaports: Port Klang, Pasir Gudang (in the southern State of Johor) and Penang (Figure 12). Port Klang made four seizures, of over 10 tonnes of ivory, while the ports of Pasir Gudang and Penang seized 2974 kg and 1586 kg of ivory respectively. Over 72% ( kg) of the large-scale ivory seizures recorded globally from were shipped by sea (Milliken, 2014a). 16

26 Figure 12: Peninsular Malaysia s seaports and the three ports in which ivory seizures took place Source: TRAFFIC Port Klang, where four of the six large-scale ivory seizures were made, is the main cargo gateway by sea into Malaysia and is just some 40 km from the nation s capital of Kuala Lumpur. First opened on 15 September 1901 (known then as Port Swettenham), Port Klang is today in the top 12 of the world s leading ports ( It handles some 11 million twenty-foot equivalent unit (TEU) containers a year, joining the elite rank of ports throughout the world that operate in the above 1 million TEUs league. Port Klang links with more than 500 ports worldwide, with trade connections to over 120 countries and territories. Its geographical location makes it the first port of call for ships on the eastbound leg and the last port of call on the westbound leg of the Far East Europe trade route (Port Klang Authority, 2012). The ports of Penang and Pasir Gudang (where the other Malaysian seizures were made) are also equipped to welcome larger vessels and handle great volumes of containers at a fast pace. Collectively, these three ports facilitate the movement of large containers from around the globe in a timely and efficient manner. Malaysia s geographical position with respect to the world s major ivory consumers, China and Thailand, and efficient and well-developed port infrastructure is certainly a key reason why the country is used to smuggle ivory. The sheer quantity and speed of cargo moving through these major seaports involves tens of millions of containers each year, making the detection of illicit ivory 17

27 shipments extremely challenging. The large volume of ivory moving through Malaysia is testament to the repeated exploitation of the country s port facilities by criminal syndicates, perhaps because Malaysia is viewed as a path that offers lower risk compared to other alternative ports in the region. As mentioned, large transboundary movements of ivory across continents point to organized criminality involvement, an ivory trade dynamic that has increased especially over the past six years (Milliken et al., 2013). Although a majority of large-scale seizures described in this report have occurred at seaports, eight significant seizures took place at five different airports, involving shipments that were on their way to or through Malaysia (Table 8). While only three were large-scale seizures originating from Kenya, Tanzania and Uganda (each weighing between 1500 kg to 2160 kg), it is clear that the use of airports to smuggle large quantities of ivory through international borders is on the rise. Moving ivory in hand-carried or checked-in luggage is rising as air travel is becoming more frequent as a modus operandi for ivory smuggling. For example, following a routine inspection in June 2014, Hong Kong Customs arrested 16 passengers in transit from Angola with 790 kg of raw and worked ivory spread between them in 32 pieces of check-in baggage (Milliken 2014b). This particular case (which did not transit through Malaysia) was indicative of emerging alternatives to containerized shipping for moving large volumes of ivory. As smugglers are always adapting to circumstances, more vigilance and collaborative law enforcement efforts with airport authorities is critical for preventing transit trade through the country. Table 8: Ivory seizures at airports, implicating Malaysia When Country/ Territory Airport Min estimated weight of ivory (kg) Dec 2013 Uganda Entebbe International Airport Oct 2013 Uganda Entebbe International Airport Oct 2013 Zimbabwe Harare International Airport Jan 2013 Dubai Dubai International Airport Oct 2012 Hong Kong Hong Kong International Airport Sep 2012 Kenya Jomo-Kenyatta International Airport Notes 1500 Ugandan Police seized raw and worked ivory pieces, as well as 15 rhino horn pieces that were on their way to Malaysia. A Nigerian company was listed as consignee of the shipment. 116 Ugandan Police seized raw ivory and pangolin scales. Four suspects were arrested, two Chinese nationals and two Guinean nationals, who confessed that the contraband was headed to China via Malaysia. 114 A Chinese man was arrested at Harare International Airport in Zimbabwe carrying raw and worked ivory while trying to board a flight to Malaysia. (Note: There are no direct flights to Malaysia from Zimbabwe, and therefore the suspect s route involved other countries) 447 Dubai Airports Security seized raw ivory tusks and worked ivory products; Malaysia was listed as the country of destination Hong Kong airport authorities seized raw tusks and worked ivory products that passed through a Malaysian port 255 Kenyan airport authorities intercepted a shipment of ivory declared as avocados. The cargo was destined for Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, aboard Qatar Airways via Doha. 18

28 Jun 2012 Uganda Entebbe International Airport Aug 2010 Kenya Jomo-Kenyatta International Airport 426 Customs officials impounded raw ivory that was destined for Malaysia, concealed inside five metallic suitcases Sniffer dogs detected five rhino horns and raw ivory that was bound for Malaysia. Two suspects were arrested. The Royal Malaysian Customs, in January 2015, reported increased vigilance at airports as they have seen the emergence of ivory smuggling attempts through Malaysia since 2013 (Lim, 2015). As a result, they arrested a Chinese national for smuggling 16 pieces of ivory who was later successfully convicted and fined MYR (USD80 645) and given a jail term of two months. In February 2016, two ivory seizures, totalling 159 kg, were made by the Royal Malaysian Customs, from flights that originated from Angola and Ethiopia (Nadirah, 2016). These two cases involved three Vietnamese nationals, two of whom were arrested; these suspects had reportedly entered the country on three other occasions recently and both shipments involved an Ethiopian connection, according to ongoing investigations. More recently, in July 2016, the Royal Malaysian Customs made its first large-scale seizure since 2011 at Kuala Lumpur International Airport, when a shipment of tusks from the Democratic Republic of Congo was seized, weighing just over 1000 kg (Bernama, 2016). This shipment arrived via a Turkish Airline Cargo from Kinshasha International Airport, with a transit in Istanbul, Turkey. Organized crime groups are known to utilize sophisticated smuggling techniques, often with discreet knowledge of the regulatory systems and procedures employed, coupled with targeted corruption as a conduit, to move high-valued goods in an undetected, or at least unobstructed, manner (UNODC, 2013; EIA, 2014). Criminal operatives seek out pathways that are deemed to be safe enough to minimize risks and losses that would be suffered through seizures. It is believed that such operations fully consider law enforcement effort and performance, making allowances for modifying the shipping channels of particular consignments as necessary; or using less well-monitored routes. Successful shipping channels are believed to be repeatedly used until such time that circumstances change and modification of trade routes becomes a necessity, the foremost reason being when enforcement effort is enhanced and shipments are intercepted, criminal syndicates suffer losses. Good and consistent law enforcement performance is precisely what Malaysia needs in order to cease being one of the countries of primary concern in the illicit movement of ivory. Large-scale consignments of ivory anything from 500 kg to over 7000 kg are the product of intricate webs of organized criminality involving high levels of financial, organizational and networking resources that enable illicit shipments to be transported across continents and seas without obstruction. These webs give rise to the necessary resources that activate local poaching syndicates in elephant range States, set up the consolidation hubs for amassing poached ivory and preparing it for shipment to Asia, and organizing the transportation across continents and seas to end-use destinations, all while evading interdiction. It is believed that currently, a significant portion of these transnational syndicates involved in ivory trade function as Asian-run, Africa-based operations (Milliken, 2014a). 19

29 CONCLUSION Priorities identified by Malaysia in its National Ivory Action Plan are relevant to and valid for addressing the issues identified by this report. Efforts in terms of the national-level enforcement action, investigation and inter-agency coordination and international enforcement collaboration categories are perhaps the highest priorities as such actions would contribute towards scaling up law enforcement along the entire trade chain and deterring criminal syndicates from using Malaysia as a transit country. While data on ivory shipments that have been detected moving in and out of Malaysia s borders is available, the lack of complete information on the parties (such as cargo exporters, consignees, handling agents and logistics companies) involved in these shipments presents a challenge in enabling comprehensive assessments that could lead to the targeting of businesses involved in ivory trafficking. This, however, marks the very piece of the puzzle that requires further investigation. The need for an intelligence-led approach is paramount for any attempt to eliminate the use of Malaysian ports (both sea and air) as a facilitating link in this illicit trade. Only through multinational and multi-agency collaboration will the illicit ivory flow through Malaysia be disrupted. Such approaches, when used, have been found to be effective. In 2011, authorities at Penang Port received intelligence relating to two containers containing elephant tusks en route to Port Klang before the ship arrived at Penang Port. Collaborative action and timely communication resulted in the successful seizure of 675 elephant tusks. The tusks were hidden in 92 plastic bags, placed in the middle of a container, and surrounded by recycled crushed plastic. Similarly, intelligenceled collaborations have spurred successful investigations that stand behind a vast number of other seizures that have occurred globally, including in China, the country with the world s largest ivory market. ETIS data also highlight that the principal method of detection resulting in seizures of containerized shipping through African ports has been intelligence-led information accounting for at least one-third of seizures (Milliken, 2014). This clearly points to the invaluable need to cultivate informant networks at the national level, while at the same time developing and enhancing co-operation at regional and international levels. Furthermore, identification of trade route patterns and the understanding of export and end-use markets will allow for better detection through thoughtful risk profiling and targeting. Careful and targeted intelligence-led law enforcement efforts are needed to arrest the criminals involved in smuggling operations. Due to Malaysia s position as a leading transit country, it is believed that the criminals behind the trade are not likely to enter Malaysia on a frequent basis but may work through local handling agents. In this regard, Malaysia was listed as the country of export for two large-scale seizures made by Viet Nam, suggesting that the cargo was offloaded in Malaysia before moving on to Viet Nam; if so, the identity of the local agents who facilitated the trade should be apparent. In another six seizure cases that took place from 2010 to 2013, Malaysia was identified as the country of destination. As Malaysia does not possess a domestic ivory market, in these cases, the likelihood of the illicit cargo being offloaded in Malaysia and then re-exported to disguise the fact that the cargo originated in Africa, cannot be discounted. Therefore, officials in the country must apply risk indicators and profiling to eliminate potential exploitation of the control mechanisms in place at its ports. More targeted identification or organized criminal operations through collaborative relationships with source and destination/end-use countries will aid this process. The strongest legal framework for fighting organized crime in the country (such as the syndicates that are behind the ivory trafficking through Malaysia) came into place in November The Malaysian government recognized violations under the Wildlife Conservation Act 2010 and the 20

30 International Trade in Endangered Species Act 2008, such as the import and export of wildlife, as serious offences under the Second Schedule of the Anti-Money Laundering, Anti-Terrorism Financing and Proceeds of Unlawful Activities Act 2001 (Amendment 2014). Several cases of Malaysians involved in wildlife smuggling, including ivory, have been recorded. For example, in February 2015, a Malaysian businessman was arrested in Bangkok, Thailand for smuggling 51 pieces of ivory, weighing 135 kg, demonstrating the direct involvement of Malaysians in the illicit trade (Lee, 2015). This law not only enables the government to take action against those violating laws within the country, but also to initiate investigations against those conducting criminal activity outside the country. This case, although the outcomes remain unknown, paved the way for law enforcement collaboration between the Malaysian and Thai authorities to address ivory smuggling. The utilization of the legal option with the Anti-Money Laundering Act must be expanded and included among the suite of actions employed by the Malaysian government to fight wildlife crime. The role of the Malaysian Royal Customs is perhaps the most essential in addressing this issue. The legal mechanisms already in place enable Customs officers to take more of a leadership role and empowers them to take strong action against illegal wildlife traders. Two key areas are being addressed by the Royal Malaysian Customs to improve performance in this regard. The first is the U-Customs, a new system aimed at professionalizing how information is gathered, analysed, managed and utilized for the sole purpose of improving law enforcement by Customs. The establishment of this system is ongoing and came into effect at the end of The second issue concerns controlled delivery, which is an investigative tool and technique used (often in drug trafficking cases) when consignments of illicit commodities are detected but then allowed to proceed to the end destination under surveillance by law enforcement officers to understand underlying dynamics of the trade better and to make arrests further up the trade chain. The intention for such a course of action is to secure evidence against offenders and organizers of illicit conduct. The execution of this law enforcement tactic necessarily involves the Attorney General s Chambers and other legal bodies in the country to ensure compliance with Malaysia s national laws. Participation in controlled deliveries was recommended by the CITES Secretariat (CITES, 2011; United Nations, 2014) given that Malaysia is almost exclusively being used as a transit country, and such action is currently being considered by the Malaysian government. On another front, a standardized stockpile management system, that considers the centralization, marking, registration, storage and security aspects for large quantities of seized illicit goods, is a critical need for Malaysia. In April 2016, the Malaysian government destroyed 9550 kg of ivory seized in the country from enforcement actions that took place between 2011 and 2015 (TRAFFIC, 2016). The government reported that the portion of stockpile destroyed was audited by a government committee which drew its membership from the Ministry of Natural Resources and Environment, the National Audit Department, the Anti-Corruption Commission, Royal Malaysian Customs and the DWNP. This lack of participation from bodies independent of the government in the process is a weakness. Last year, the DWNP participated in an ivory forensics DNA testing exercise for seized ivory, in collaboration with the U.S. government and selected African countries (NRE, 2016; Wasser et al., 2015). This collaboration forms a global effort that links countries of export, import and transit of ivory to facilitate partnerships in determining the source of smuggled ivory, assists with criminal investigations in source countries and enables the development of improved protection measures at ivory source countries. Further, the results of such efforts serve to guide and enable informed decision-making for the protection of African Elephants including providing a general description of where African Elephants were killed for their tusks. Findings from the forensic exercise of ivory seized in Malaysia that was undertaken in 2014 for example, point to tusks originating from 11 countries (Central African Republic, Corte d Ivoire, Democratic Republic of Congo, Gabon, Ghana, Kenya, Mozambique, South Sudan, Tanzania, Uganda and Zambia) (NRE, 2016). 21

31 The report highlights some of the key countries involved in the movement of illegal ivory shipments through Malaysia, both from Africa, and end-use destinations in East Asia. Links with enforcement agencies in Africa and elsewhere in Asia, particularly end-use and other transit countries (China, Viet Nam and Thailand) will be critical to disrupting operative trade chains. Utilization of regional and international enforcement co-ordination with respective countries and territories where seizures have been made (involving Malaysia) is critical. Where local businesses and/or individuals are identified, further investigations should follow and arrests and prosecutions pursued if jurisdictionally possible. This analysis emphasises the prominent position of Malaysia as a transit gateway in the web of ivory smuggling. The need for an intelligence-led approach is crucial for any attempt to eliminate the use of Malaysian ports in facilitating this trade, and to ensure that investigative efforts do not cease at the point of seizure, but instead are initiated along the entire trade chain. Government law enforcement agencies must become proactive and globally collaborative if there is hope of putting an end to the operations of organized crime groups. In fact, as Malaysia does not have a domestic ivory market, its prospect in extracting itself from continuous incrimination in this global trade is perhaps easier compared to the other countries. A combination of targeted and decisive efforts at the national level will be critical in achieving this goal. The challenge presents an overwhelming task due to the volume of goods passing through Malaysian ports, but one that is truly achievable, and indeed necessary to eradicate the use of Malaysian ports by smugglers to transport illicit ivory. 22

32 REFERENCES Anon. (2010). Ivory Seized in Airport Luggage. BBC News (UK) September. Anon. (2015a). Vietnam seizes elephant tusks, pangolin scales in large shipment from Malaysia. Than Nien News (Viet Nam) August. Anon. (2015b). Thailand seizes four tonnes of ivory in record bust. Aljazeera. news/2015/04/thailand-ivory html. 21 April. Australian Government. (2015). ACBPS officers seize 100kilograms of ivory in Perth. Australian Government Department of Immigration and Border Protection. 9 April. Bernama. (2016). KLIA Customs Foil Attempt to Smuggle Ivory Worth over RM10m. Bernama National News Agency (Malaysia): 1 August. Blanc, J., Burnham, K., Dublin, H., Milliken, T., Mwangi, P., Sangalakula, L., Skinner, D. and Underwood, F. Status of African elephant populations and levels of illegal killing and the illegal trade in ivory: A report to the African elephant Summit. December CITES, IUCN and TRAFFIC. Carvalho, M., Rahimy, R., Cheah, C., Rahmah, G. and Dina, M. (2015). Govt Seeks to Clamp Down on Ivory Smuggling. The Star (Malaysia). 20 March. +down+on+ivory+smuggling&sec=news&id=%7b1426e458-32b1-4c becec77e8%7d. Christy, B. (2014). Togo makes second record ivory seizure. National Geographic. 3 February. nationalgeographic.com/2014/02/03/togo-makes-second-record-ivory-seizure/.html CITES. (2011). Controlled deliveries: a tool for reaching the big players in illegal wildlife trafficking. CITES Secretariat. Geneva, Switzerland December. CITES, IUCN and TRAFFIC. (2013). Status of African elephant populations and levels of illegal killing and the illegal trade in ivory: A report to the African Elephant Summit. african_elephant_summit_background_document_2013_en.pdf CITES. (2013). Resolution Conf (Rev CoP 16): Trade in elephant specimens. 16 th meeting of the Conference of the Parties, Bangkok (Thailand), 3-14 March CITES (2014a). Resolution Conf (Rev. CoP16). Trade in Elephant Specimens. CITES Secretariat. G Geneva land, Switzerland. CITES. (2014b). National Ivory Action Plans. SC65 Doc , 65 th Meeting of the Standing Committee, Geneva, Switzerland, 7-11 July. CITES. (2015). Monitoring the illegal trade in ivory (No. 2015/044). Geneva, Switzerland, 3 August. EIA (2014). In cold blood: Combating organised wildlife crime. Environmental Investigation Agency, London, UK. Lim, K. Y. (2015). The fate of seized ivory in Malaysia. The Star (Malaysia). lifestyle/features/2015/01/26/the-fate-of-seized-ivory-in-malaysia/. 26 January. Lee, P. (2015). Malaysian arrested in Thailand for smuggling ivory worth RM 658k. The Star (Malaysia) March. Milliken, T., Burn, R.W. and Sangalakula, L. (2009). The Elephant Trade Information System (ETIS) and the Illicit Trade in Ivory: A report to the 15th meeting of the Conference of Parties. CoP15 Doc. 44.1, Annex 1; CITES, Gland, Switzerland. Milliken, T. (2013). Progress in implementing the Elephant Trade Information System. Pachyderm No 53: Milliken, T., Burn, R.W., Underwood, F.M. and Sangalakula, L.F.M. (2013). The Elephant Trade Information System (ETIS) and the Illicit Trade in Ivory: A report to the 16 th meeting of the Conference of the Parties. CoP16 Doc (Rev. 1); CITES, Gland, Switzerland. Milliken, T. (2014a). Illegal Trade in Ivory and Rhino Horn: an Assessment Report to Improve Law Enforcement Under the Wildlife TRAPS Project. USAID and TRAFFIC, Cambridge, UK. Nadirah H. Rodzi. (2016). Elephant Tusks Seized at KLIA. The Star (Malaysia). news/nation/2016/03/03/elephant-tusks-seized-at-klia-three-vietnamese-men-on-transit-nabbed-atarrival-hall/.html. 3 March. 23

33 Nadirah H. Rodzi. (2016). Elephant Tusks Seized at KLIA. The Star (Malaysia). news/nation/2016/03/03/elephant-tusks-seized-at-klia-three-vietnamese-men-on-transit-nabbed-atarrival-hall/.3 March. Ministry of Natural Resources and Environment (NRE). (2014). Destruction of Seized Ivory in Malaysia. NRE Media Statement. pdf. 14 April. Port Klang Authority, 2012: background-.html. Port Klang Authority. Selangor, Malaysia. TRAFFIC. (2010). Thailand Customs seize four suitcases filled with ivory. TRAFFIC Press Release. TRAFFIC. (2012). Massive African ivory seizure in Malaysia. TRAFFIC Press Release. org/home/2012/12/11/massive-african-ivory-seizure-in-malaysia.html.11 December. TRAFFIC. (2016). Vigilance Urged as Malaysia Destroys Huge Ivory Stockpile. TRAFFIC Press Release April. UNODC (2013) Transnational Organized Crime in East Asia and the Pacific: A Threat Assessment. United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime, Vienna, Austria. Yap. S. H. (2014). U-Customs beroperasi 1 Jan The Borneo Post (Malaysia). theborneopost.com/2014/08/06/u-customs-beroperasi-1-jan-2016/ 6 August. Wasser, S.K., Brown, L., Mailand, C., Mondol, S., Clark, W., Laurie, C. and Weir, B.S. (2015). Genetic assignment of large seizures of elephant ivory reveals Africa s major poaching hotspots. Science Vol. 349, Issue 6243, pp DOI: /science.aaa2457 Wittemyer, G., Northrup, J. M., Blanc, J., Douglas-Hamilton, I., Omondi, P. and Burnham, K. P. (2014). Illegal killing for ivory drives global decline in African elephants. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 111,

34 SEPTEMBER 2016 TRAFFIC, the wildlife trade monitoring network, is the leading non-governmental organization working globally on trade in wild animals and plants in the context of both biodiversity conservation and sustainable development. For further information contact: TRAFFIC Southeast Asia Regional Office Unit 3-2, 1st Floor Jalan SS23/11, Taman SEA Petaling Jaya Selangor, Malaysia Telephone: (603) Fax : (603) Website: UK Registered Charity No , Registered Limited Company No is a strategic alliance of 25

Secretariat s overview on Parties that have 'substantially achieved' their NIAPs

Secretariat s overview on Parties that have 'substantially achieved' their NIAPs SC69 Doc. 29.3 Annex 13 (English only / Únicamente en inglés / Seulement en anglais) Secretariat s overview on Parties that have 'substantially achieved' their NIAPs China Key findings of the ETIS report

More information

Africa-Asia Pacific Symposium on Strengthening Legal Frameworks to Combat Wildlife Crime

Africa-Asia Pacific Symposium on Strengthening Legal Frameworks to Combat Wildlife Crime In partnership with Africa-Asia Pacific Symposium on Strengthening Legal Frameworks to Combat Wildlife Crime United Nations Inter-Agency Task Force on Illicit Trade in Wildlife and Forest Products Bangkok,

More information

CONVENTION ON INTERNATIONAL TRADE IN ENDANGERED SPECIES OF WILD FAUNA AND FLORA

CONVENTION ON INTERNATIONAL TRADE IN ENDANGERED SPECIES OF WILD FAUNA AND FLORA CONVENTION ON INTERNATIONAL TRADE IN ENDANGERED SPECIES OF WILD FAUNA AND FLORA Thirteenth meeting of the Conference of the Parties Bangkok (Thailand), 2-14 October 2004 CoP13 Doc. 29.2 Interpretation

More information

CITES SC69 NATIONAL IVORY ACTION PLAN PROGRESS REPORT Parties of Primary Concern Party: MALAYSIA

CITES SC69 NATIONAL IVORY ACTION PLAN PROGRESS REPORT Parties of Primary Concern Party: MALAYSIA SC69 Doc. 29.3 Annex 14 (English only / Únicamente en inglés / Seulement en anglais) CITES SC69 NATIONAL IVORY ACTION PLAN PROGRESS REPORT Parties of Primary Concern Prepared for the 69 th meeting of CITES

More information

Questionnaire for important consumer and trading countries of saiga parts and derivatives

Questionnaire for important consumer and trading countries of saiga parts and derivatives Questionnaire for important consumer and trading countries of saiga parts and derivatives Questionnaire for important consumer and trading countries of saiga parts and derivatives: Status of the implementation

More information

Original language: English SC69 Sum. 4 (Rev. 1) (28/11/17) CONVENTION ON INTERNATIONAL TRADE IN ENDANGERED SPECIES OF WILD FAUNA AND FLORA

Original language: English SC69 Sum. 4 (Rev. 1) (28/11/17) CONVENTION ON INTERNATIONAL TRADE IN ENDANGERED SPECIES OF WILD FAUNA AND FLORA Original language: English SC69 Sum. 4 (Rev. 1) (28/11/17) CONVENTION ON INTERNATIONAL TRADE IN ENDANGERED SPECIES OF WILD FAUNA AND FLORA Sixty-ninth meeting of the Standing Committee Geneva (Switzerland),

More information

Original language: English CoP16 Doc CONVENTION ON INTERNATIONAL TRADE IN ENDANGERED SPECIES OF WILD FAUNA AND FLORA

Original language: English CoP16 Doc CONVENTION ON INTERNATIONAL TRADE IN ENDANGERED SPECIES OF WILD FAUNA AND FLORA Original language: English CoP16 Doc. 53.2.1 CONVENTION ON INTERNATIONAL TRADE IN ENDANGERED SPECIES OF WILD FAUNA AND FLORA Sixteenth meeting of the Conference of the Parties Bangkok (Thailand), 3-14

More information

Original language: English SC70 Sum. 2 (01/10/18) CONVENTION ON INTERNATIONAL TRADE IN ENDANGERED SPECIES OF WILD FAUNA AND FLORA

Original language: English SC70 Sum. 2 (01/10/18) CONVENTION ON INTERNATIONAL TRADE IN ENDANGERED SPECIES OF WILD FAUNA AND FLORA Original language: English SC70 Sum. 2 (01/10/18) CONVENTION ON INTERNATIONAL TRADE IN ENDANGERED SPECIES OF WILD FAUNA AND FLORA Seventieth meeting of the Standing Committee Rosa Khutor, Sochi (Russian

More information

CONVENTION ON INTERNATIONAL TRADE IN ENDANGERED SPECIES OF WILD FAUNA AND FLORA

CONVENTION ON INTERNATIONAL TRADE IN ENDANGERED SPECIES OF WILD FAUNA AND FLORA (English only / únicamente en inglés / seulement en anglais) CONVENTION ON INTERNATIONAL TRADE IN ENDANGERED SPECIES OF WILD FAUNA AND FLORA Sixty-fifth meeting of the Standing Committee Geneva (Switzerland),

More information

1. Update on arrests seizures prosecutions and penalties for offences related to illegal rhinoceros's horn trade in Viet Nam since SC65 (July 2014)

1. Update on arrests seizures prosecutions and penalties for offences related to illegal rhinoceros's horn trade in Viet Nam since SC65 (July 2014) SC66 Doc. 51.1 Annex 2 (English only / únicamente en inglés / seulement en anglais) BỘ NÔNG NGHIỆP VÀ PHÁT TRIỂN NÔNG THÔN Report to the CITES Secretariat on Viet Nam's compliance with recommendation of

More information

CASE STUDY FROM SRI LANKA

CASE STUDY FROM SRI LANKA CASE STUDY FROM SRI LANKA Corruption: the elephant in the room Samantha Gunasekara Deputy Director of Customs (Rtd.) Biodiversity, Cultural & National Heritage Protection Division Sri Lanka Customs E mail;samantharg555@gmail.com

More information

IVORY ACTION PLAN PROGRESS S REPORT Parties of primary concern Party: UGANDA. Reporting period: JUNE 2014 SEPTEMBER

IVORY ACTION PLAN PROGRESS S REPORT Parties of primary concern Party: UGANDA. Reporting period: JUNE 2014 SEPTEMBER CITES SC66 NATIONAL IVORY ACTION PLAN PROGRESS S REPORT Parties of primary concern Prepared for the 66th meeting of the CITES Standing Committee ---------- Party: UGANDA Reporting period: JUNE 2014 SEPTEMBER

More information

T R A F F I C PENDANTS, POWDER AND PATHWAYS

T R A F F I C PENDANTS, POWDER AND PATHWAYS T R A F F I C PENDANTS, POWDER AND PATHWAYS S U M M A R Y SEPTEMBER 2017 A rapid assessment of smuggling routes and techniques used in the illicit trade in African rhino horn Sade Moneron, Nicola Okes

More information

TRAINING MODULE WILDLIFE AND CRIMINAL LAW STRENTHENING LEGAL MECHANISMS TO COMBAT ILLICIT WILDLIFE TRADE EXERCISE 1. Mock Trial

TRAINING MODULE WILDLIFE AND CRIMINAL LAW STRENTHENING LEGAL MECHANISMS TO COMBAT ILLICIT WILDLIFE TRADE EXERCISE 1. Mock Trial TRAINING MODULE WILDLIFE AND CRIMINAL LAW STRENTHENING LEGAL MECHANISMS TO COMBAT ILLICIT WILDLIFE TRADE EXERCISE 1 Mock Trial Nature of the Exercise o Knowledge-reinforcing exercise o Group exercise o

More information

Original language: English SC66 Doc CONVENTION ON INTERNATIONAL TRADE IN ENDANGERED SPECIES OF WILD FAUNA AND FLORA

Original language: English SC66 Doc CONVENTION ON INTERNATIONAL TRADE IN ENDANGERED SPECIES OF WILD FAUNA AND FLORA Original language: English SC66 Doc. 32.5 CONVENTION ON INTERNATIONAL TRADE IN ENDANGERED SPECIES OF WILD FAUNA AND FLORA Sixty-sixth meeting of the Standing Committee Geneva (Switzerland), 11-15 January

More information

CONVENTION ON INTERNATIONAL TRADE IN ENDANGERED SPECIES OF WILD FAUNA AND FLORA

CONVENTION ON INTERNATIONAL TRADE IN ENDANGERED SPECIES OF WILD FAUNA AND FLORA SC66 Inf. 22 (English only / únicamente en inglés / seulement en anglais) CONVENTION ON INTERNATIONAL TRADE IN ENDANGERED SPECIES OF WILD FAUNA AND FLORA Sixty-sixth meeting of the Standing Committee Geneva

More information

Summary of National Green Customs Initiative Workshop in Korea

Summary of National Green Customs Initiative Workshop in Korea Summary of National Green Customs Initiative Workshop in Korea Introduction 1. Venue : Customs Border Control Training Institute, Cheonan, Korea 2. Date : 7-8 June 2017 3. Organizer Korea Customs Service

More information

Original language: English SC70 Doc CONVENTION ON INTERNATIONAL TRADE IN ENDANGERED SPECIES OF WILD FAUNA AND FLORA

Original language: English SC70 Doc CONVENTION ON INTERNATIONAL TRADE IN ENDANGERED SPECIES OF WILD FAUNA AND FLORA Original language: English SC70 Doc. 27.3.2.2 CONVENTION ON INTERNATIONAL TRADE IN ENDANGERED SPECIES OF WILD FAUNA AND FLORA Seventieth meeting of the Standing Committee Rosa Khutor, Sochi (Russian Federation),

More information

ICCWC Indicator Framework for Combating Wildlife and Forest Crime

ICCWC Indicator Framework for Combating Wildlife and Forest Crime International Consortium on Combating Wildlife Crime ICCWC Indicator Framework for Combating Wildlife and Forest Crime A self-assessment framework for national use ASSESSMENT GUIDELINES ASSESSMENT TEMPLATE

More information

Original language: English SC66 Doc CONVENTION ON INTERNATIONAL TRADE IN ENDANGERED SPECIES OF WILD FAUNA AND FLORA

Original language: English SC66 Doc CONVENTION ON INTERNATIONAL TRADE IN ENDANGERED SPECIES OF WILD FAUNA AND FLORA Original language: English SC66 Doc. 50.1 CONVENTION ON INTERNATIONAL TRADE IN ENDANGERED SPECIES OF WILD FAUNA AND FLORA Sixty-sixth meeting of the Standing Committee Geneva (Switzerland), 11-15 January

More information

BỘ"NÔNG"NGHIỆP"VÀ"PHÁT"TRIỂN"NÔNG"THÔN"

BỘNÔNGNGHIỆPVÀPHÁTTRIỂNNÔNGTHÔN z! SC65 Doc. 43.2 BỘNÔNGNGHIỆPVÀPHÁTTRIỂNNÔNGTHÔN CƠQUANQUẢNLÝCITESVIỆTNAM MinistryofAgricultureandRuralDevelopmentofS.R.VietNam VIETNAMCITESMANAGEMENTAUTHORITY ReporttotheCITESSecretariatonVietNam scompliancewithresolutionconf.9.14

More information

GLOBAL WILDLIFE ENFORCEMENT. Strengthening Law Enforcement Cooperation Against Wildlife Crime

GLOBAL WILDLIFE ENFORCEMENT. Strengthening Law Enforcement Cooperation Against Wildlife Crime GLOBAL WILDLIFE ENFORCEMENT Strengthening Law Enforcement Cooperation Against Wildlife Crime March 2018 EXECUTIVE SUMMARY Wildlife crime is a transnational organized crime which has diversified to become

More information

CONVENTION ON INTERNATIONAL TRADE IN ENDANGERED SPECIES OF WILD FAUNA AND FLORA

CONVENTION ON INTERNATIONAL TRADE IN ENDANGERED SPECIES OF WILD FAUNA AND FLORA Doc. 11.29 CONVENTION ON INTERNATIONAL TRADE IN ENDANGERED SPECIES OF WILD FAUNA AND FLORA Eleventh meeting of the Conference of the Parties Gigiri (Kenya), 10-20 April 2000 Interpretation and implementation

More information

Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development of S.R. Viet Nam VIET NAM CITES MANAGEMENT AUTHORITY

Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development of S.R. Viet Nam VIET NAM CITES MANAGEMENT AUTHORITY SC70 Doc. 56 Annex 19 Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development of S.R. Viet Nam VIET NAM CITES MANAGEMENT AUTHORITY To: CITES Secretariat, 11-13, Chemin des Anémones 1219 Châtelaine, Genève, SWITZERLAND

More information

TRAFFIC. In Transition: Bangkok s Ivory Market. An 18-month survey of Bangkok s ivory market. Kanitha Krishnasamy, Tom Milliken and Chution Savini

TRAFFIC. In Transition: Bangkok s Ivory Market. An 18-month survey of Bangkok s ivory market. Kanitha Krishnasamy, Tom Milliken and Chution Savini TRAFFIC R E P O R T SEPTEMBER In Transition: Bangkok s Ivory Market An 18-month survey of Bangkok s ivory market Kanitha Krishnasamy, Tom Milliken and Chution Savini TRAFFIC REPORT TRAFFIC, the wild life

More information

National Ivory Action Plan for Ethiopia

National Ivory Action Plan for Ethiopia National Ivory Action Plan for Ethiopia By Ethiopian Wildlife Conservation Authority December 2014 Addis Ababa, Ethiopia Abbreviations BIA... Bole International Airport CITES.. Convention on International

More information

Original language: English CoP18 Doc CONVENTION ON INTERNATIONAL TRADE IN ENDANGERED SPECIES OF WILD FAUNA AND FLORA

Original language: English CoP18 Doc CONVENTION ON INTERNATIONAL TRADE IN ENDANGERED SPECIES OF WILD FAUNA AND FLORA Original language: English CoP18 Doc. 15.6 CONVENTION ON INTERNATIONAL TRADE IN ENDANGERED SPECIES OF WILD FAUNA AND FLORA Eighteenth meeting of the Conference of the Parties Colombo (Sri Lanka), 23 May

More information

China, Ivory Trade & the Future of Africa s Elephants

China, Ivory Trade & the Future of Africa s Elephants China, Ivory Trade & the Future of Africa s Elephants An EIA Briefing environmental investigation agency Seized ivory, 2000. EIA EIA contents page 3 page 4 page 6 page 7 BACK COVER Executive Summary Missing

More information

Questions and answers on the EU Action Plan against Wildlife Trafficking

Questions and answers on the EU Action Plan against Wildlife Trafficking EUROPEAN COMMISSION MEMO Brussels, 26 February 2016 Questions and answers on the EU Action Plan against Wildlife Trafficking Today the European Commission adopted an EU Action Plan to crack down wildlife

More information

PRODUCED IN COLLABORATION WITH OTHER STAKEHOLDERS

PRODUCED IN COLLABORATION WITH OTHER STAKEHOLDERS THE NATIONAL IVORY ACTION PLAN PRODUCED IN COLLABORATION WITH OTHER STAKEHOLDERS BY THE DEPARTMENT OF NATIONAL PARKS AND WILDLIFE LILONGWE, MALAWI REVISED NOVEMBER 2017 1 1.0 BACKGROUND The Department

More information

IFAW Business as Usual Business as Usual. A review of the regulatory systems in Japan to control domestic trade in elephant ivory

IFAW Business as Usual Business as Usual. A review of the regulatory systems in Japan to control domestic trade in elephant ivory Business as Usual A review of the regulatory systems in Japan to control domestic trade in elephant ivory An IFAW report September 2006 1 INTRODUCTION The objective of this review is to re-examine the

More information

Illegal online trade in endangered parrots: A groundbreaking investigation

Illegal online trade in endangered parrots: A groundbreaking investigation Illegal online trade in endangered parrots: A groundbreaking investigation Contents Introduction...03 Background: Parrots threatened by illegal online trade...04 Findings....05 Illegal and non-compliant

More information

2. Management of the ivory database system 3. Law enforcement

2. Management of the ivory database system 3. Law enforcement 1 Report Implementation of Thailand s National Ivory Action Plan Submitted to 67 th meeting of CITES Standing Committee ----------------------------------------- Thailand as one of eight countries of Primary

More information

It is widely recognized that the world economy

It is widely recognized that the world economy Regional Economic Integration Organizations: their Role in Implementing CITES Katalin Kecse-Nagy, Sabri Zain and Stephanie von Meibom It is widely recognized that the world economy latter part of the 20th

More information

Codebook ENACT incident monitoring project

Codebook ENACT incident monitoring project Codebook ENACT incident monitoring project October 2017 Introduction The ENACT incident monitoring project is an effort to systematically record incidents of organised crime in Africa to strengthen the

More information

TRAFFIC. THE GLOBAL TRAFFICKING OF PANGOLINS: A comprehensive summary of seizures and trafficking routes from

TRAFFIC. THE GLOBAL TRAFFICKING OF PANGOLINS: A comprehensive summary of seizures and trafficking routes from TRAFFIC R E P O R T DECEMBER 2017 THE GLOBAL TRAFFICKING OF PANGOLINS: A comprehensive summary of seizures and trafficking routes from 2010 2015 Sarah Heinrich, Talia A. Wittman, Joshua V. Ross, Chris

More information

CONVENTION SUR LE COMMERCE INTERNATIONAL DES ESPECES DE FAUNE ET DE FLORE SAUVAGES MENACEES D'EXTINCTION

CONVENTION SUR LE COMMERCE INTERNATIONAL DES ESPECES DE FAUNE ET DE FLORE SAUVAGES MENACEES D'EXTINCTION CONVENTION SUR LE COMMERCE INTERNATIONAL DES ESPECES DE FAUNE ET DE FLORE SAUVAGES MENACEES D'EXTINCTION Quarante-sixième session du Comité permanent Genève (Suisse), 12 15 mars 2002 SC46 Doc. 20.2 Rapports

More information

IMPLEMENTATION OF PROVISIONS RELATING TO DOMESTIC IVORY MARKETS CONTAINED IN RESOLUTION CONF (REV. COP17)

IMPLEMENTATION OF PROVISIONS RELATING TO DOMESTIC IVORY MARKETS CONTAINED IN RESOLUTION CONF (REV. COP17) SC70 Doc. 49.1 Annex 2 IMPLEMENTATION OF PROVISIONS RELATING TO DOMESTIC IVORY MARKETS CONTAINED IN RESOLUTION CONF. 10.10 (REV. COP17) Australia RESPONSES PROVIDED BY PARTIES TO NOTIFICATION 2017/077

More information

EUROPEAN COMMISSION DIRECTORATE-GENERAL ENVIRONMENT Directorate F - Global Sustainable Development ENV.F.3 - Multilateral Environmental Cooperation

EUROPEAN COMMISSION DIRECTORATE-GENERAL ENVIRONMENT Directorate F - Global Sustainable Development ENV.F.3 - Multilateral Environmental Cooperation Ref. Ares(2018)2116435-20/04/2018 EUROPEAN COMMISSION DIRECTORATE-GENERAL ENVIRONMENT Directorate F - Global Sustainable Development ENV.F.3 - Multilateral Environmental Cooperation Brussels, ENV.F3/GdRAres(2018)

More information

CITES NATIONAL IVORY ACTION PLAN PROGRESS REPORT

CITES NATIONAL IVORY ACTION PLAN PROGRESS REPORT SC70 Doc. 27.4 Annex 9 CITES NATIONAL IVORY ACTION PLAN PROGRESS REPORT Prepared for the 70th meeting of the CITES Standing Committee ---------- Party: Egypt Reporting period: July, 2017 June, 2018 1 PART

More information

3.1 The specific sections in the Act, which regulate the production of SALW, are as follows:

3.1 The specific sections in the Act, which regulate the production of SALW, are as follows: REPORT ON MALAYSIA S IMPLEMENTATION OF THE UNITED NATIONS PROGRAMME OF ACTION TO PREVENT, COMBAT AND ERADICATE THE ILLICIT TRADE IN SMALL ARMS AND LIGHT WEAPONS IN ALL ITS ASPECTS NATIONAL LEVEL National

More information

Stopping illegal imports of animal products into Great Britain

Stopping illegal imports of animal products into Great Britain HM CUSTOMS AND EXCISE Stopping illegal imports of animal products into Great Britain LONDON: The Stationery Office 9.25 Ordered by the House of Commons to be printed on 21 March 2005 REPORT BY THE COMPTROLLER

More information

COMMUNICATION FROM THE COMMISSION TO THE COUNCIL AND THE EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT. on the EU Approach against Wildlife Trafficking

COMMUNICATION FROM THE COMMISSION TO THE COUNCIL AND THE EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT. on the EU Approach against Wildlife Trafficking EUROPEAN COMMISSION Brussels, 7.2.2014 COM(2014) 64 final COMMUNICATION FROM THE COMMISSION TO THE COUNCIL AND THE EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT on the EU Approach against Wildlife Trafficking EN EN COMMUNICATION

More information

Original language: English SC69 Sum. 6 (Rev. 1) (29/11/17) CONVENTION ON INTERNATIONAL TRADE IN ENDANGERED SPECIES OF WILD FAUNA AND FLORA

Original language: English SC69 Sum. 6 (Rev. 1) (29/11/17) CONVENTION ON INTERNATIONAL TRADE IN ENDANGERED SPECIES OF WILD FAUNA AND FLORA Original language: English SC69 Sum. 6 (Rev. 1) (29/11/17) CONVENTION ON INTERNATIONAL TRADE IN ENDANGERED SPECIES OF WILD FAUNA AND FLORA Sixty-ninth meeting of the Standing Committee Geneva (Switzerland),

More information

Original language: English SC69 Doc CONVENTION ON INTERNATIONAL TRADE IN ENDANGERED SPECIES OF WILD FAUNA AND FLORA

Original language: English SC69 Doc CONVENTION ON INTERNATIONAL TRADE IN ENDANGERED SPECIES OF WILD FAUNA AND FLORA Original language: English SC69 Doc. 51.4 CONVENTION ON INTERNATIONAL TRADE IN ENDANGERED SPECIES OF WILD FAUNA AND FLORA Sixty-ninth meeting of the Standing Committee Geneva (Switzerland), 27 November

More information

National legislation and prevention of illegal trade of wildlife, including Ivory in Sri Lanka

National legislation and prevention of illegal trade of wildlife, including Ivory in Sri Lanka SC69 Doc. 29.3 Annex 6 (English only / Únicamente en inglés / Seulement en anglais) Background National legislation and prevention of illegal trade of wildlife, including Ivory in Sri Lanka Sri Lanka is

More information

Original language: Spanish CoP18 Doc CONVENTION ON INTERNATIONAL TRADE IN ENDANGERED SPECIES OF WILD FAUNA AND FLORA

Original language: Spanish CoP18 Doc CONVENTION ON INTERNATIONAL TRADE IN ENDANGERED SPECIES OF WILD FAUNA AND FLORA Original language: Spanish CoP18 Doc. 77.2 CONVENTION ON INTERNATIONAL TRADE IN ENDANGERED SPECIES OF WILD FAUNA AND FLORA Eighteenth meeting of the Conference of the Parties Colombo (Sri Lanka), 23 May

More information

CITES SC66 NATIONAL IVORY ACTION PLAN PROGRESS REPORT Parties of primary concern Party: MALAYSIA

CITES SC66 NATIONAL IVORY ACTION PLAN PROGRESS REPORT Parties of primary concern Party: MALAYSIA CITES SC66 NATIONAL IVORY ACTION PLAN PROGRESS REPORT Parties of primary concern Prepared for the 66th meeting of the CITES Standing Committee ---------- Party: MALAYSIA Reporting period: 16 NOVEMBER 2013

More information

CITES SC69 NATIONAL IVORY ACTION PLAN PROGRESS REPORT. Prepared for the 69th meeting of the CITES Standing Committee.

CITES SC69 NATIONAL IVORY ACTION PLAN PROGRESS REPORT. Prepared for the 69th meeting of the CITES Standing Committee. CITES SC69 NATIONAL IVORY ACTION PLAN PROGRESS REPORT Prepared for the 69th meeting of the CITES Standing Committee Party : Egypt Reporting Period: September, 2016 June, 2017 A. Synopsis of NIAP implementation:

More information

The 6 th Special Session of the African Ministerial Conference on the Environment (AMCEN)

The 6 th Special Session of the African Ministerial Conference on the Environment (AMCEN) The 6 th Special Session of the African Ministerial Conference on the Environment (AMCEN) Background/Information Document Implementing the African Strategy on Combating Illegal Exploitation and Trade in

More information

I. Matters calling for action by the Commission on Narcotic Drugs or brought to its attention

I. Matters calling for action by the Commission on Narcotic Drugs or brought to its attention For participants only 31 October 2014 English only * * Report of the Thirty-eighth Meeting of Heads of National Drug Law Enforcement Agencies, Asia and the Pacific, held in Bangkok from 21 to 24 October

More information

AN INTERNET TOOL TO ASSIST THE EU IN THE FIGHT AGAINST WILDLIFE TRADE CRIME

AN INTERNET TOOL TO ASSIST THE EU IN THE FIGHT AGAINST WILDLIFE TRADE CRIME AN INTERNET TOOL TO ASSIST THE EU IN THE FIGHT AGAINST WILDLIFE TRADE CRIME BACKGROUND WHAT IS EU-TWIX WHY IS IT NEEDED Seized specimen for which ID assitance was sought from the mailing list Pol Meuleneire,

More information

EAST ASIA AND THE PACIFIC

EAST ASIA AND THE PACIFIC EAST ASIA AND THE PACIFIC AUSTRALIA The current legislation on trafficking in persons in Australia covers all forms of exploitation indicated in the UN Trafficking Protocol. Between 21 and 213, 14 persons

More information

Supporting Regional Integration with Effective Border Management: Border Liaison Offices. UNODC Regional Programme for Southeast Asia

Supporting Regional Integration with Effective Border Management: Border Liaison Offices. UNODC Regional Programme for Southeast Asia Supporting Regional Integration with Effective Border Management: Border Liaison Offices UNODC Regional Programme for Southeast Asia The Need for Border Liaison Offices in Southeast Asia Transnational

More information

Application for a Pre-CITES Certificate or a Certificate of Origin under Part 13A of the Environment Protection and Biodiversity Conservation Act 1999

Application for a Pre-CITES Certificate or a Certificate of Origin under Part 13A of the Environment Protection and Biodiversity Conservation Act 1999 Application for a Pre-CITES Certificate or a Certificate of Origin under Part 13A of the Environment Protection and Biodiversity Conservation Act 1999 Important notes There are severe penalties for knowingly

More information

Original language: English CoP17 Doc CONVENTION ON INTERNATIONAL TRADE IN ENDANGERED SPECIES OF WILD FAUNA AND FLORA

Original language: English CoP17 Doc CONVENTION ON INTERNATIONAL TRADE IN ENDANGERED SPECIES OF WILD FAUNA AND FLORA Original language: English CoP17 Doc. 14.3 CONVENTION ON INTERNATIONAL TRADE IN ENDANGERED SPECIES OF WILD FAUNA AND FLORA Seventeenth meeting of the Conference of the Parties Johannesburg (South Africa),

More information

CONVENTION ON INTERNATIONAL TRADE IN ENDANGERED SPECIES OF WILD FAUNA AND FLORA

CONVENTION ON INTERNATIONAL TRADE IN ENDANGERED SPECIES OF WILD FAUNA AND FLORA (English only / únicamente en inglés / seulement en anglais) CONVENTION ON INTERNATIONAL TRADE IN ENDANGERED SPECIES OF WILD FAUNA AND FLORA Sixty-first meeting of the Standing Committee Geneva (Switzerland),

More information

CONVENTION ON INTERNATIONAL TRADE IN ENDANGERED SPECIES OF WILD FAUNA AND FLORA

CONVENTION ON INTERNATIONAL TRADE IN ENDANGERED SPECIES OF WILD FAUNA AND FLORA CONVENTION ON INTERNATIONAL TRADE IN ENDANGERED SPECIES OF WILD FAUNA AND FLORA Fifteenth meeting of the Conference of the Parties Doha (Qatar), 13-25 March 2010 Interpretation and implementation of the

More information

ILLICIT WILDLIFE TRADE AND THE ROLE OF CUSTOMS

ILLICIT WILDLIFE TRADE AND THE ROLE OF CUSTOMS ILLICIT WILDLIFE TRADE AND THE ROLE OF CUSTOMS Kunio Mikuriya * I. WORLD CUSTOMS ORGANIZATION (WCO) AND CUSTOMS... 55 II. THE IDENTIFIED GAPS IN EFFECTIVE BORDER CONTROL... 56 III. THE WCO S APPROACH...

More information

EAST ASIA AND THE PACIFIC

EAST ASIA AND THE PACIFIC EAST ASIA AND THE PACIFIC Australia The current legislation on trafficking in persons in Australia covers all forms of trafficking indicated in the UN Trafficking in Persons Protocol. Investigations and

More information

CONVENTION ON INTERNATIONAL TRADE IN ENDANGERED SPECIES OF WILD FAUNA AND FLORA

CONVENTION ON INTERNATIONAL TRADE IN ENDANGERED SPECIES OF WILD FAUNA AND FLORA AC25 Doc. 6.1 CONVENTION ON INTERNATIONAL TRADE IN ENDANGERED SPECIES OF WILD FAUNA AND FLORA Twenty-fifth meeting of the Animals Committee Geneva (Switzerland), 18-22 July 2011 Regional reports AFRICA

More information

Group of Experts on Euro-Asian Transport Links, 4 th session 6th September 2010, Geneva

Group of Experts on Euro-Asian Transport Links, 4 th session 6th September 2010, Geneva Group of Experts on Euro-Asian Transport Links, 4 th session 6th September 2010, Geneva Updating the EATL priority transport infrastructure projects and developing an international investment plan under

More information

Original language: English SC70 Doc CONVENTION ON INTERNATIONAL TRADE IN ENDANGERED SPECIES OF WILD FAUNA AND FLORA

Original language: English SC70 Doc CONVENTION ON INTERNATIONAL TRADE IN ENDANGERED SPECIES OF WILD FAUNA AND FLORA Original language: English SC70 Doc. 27.3.1 CONVENTION ON INTERNATIONAL TRADE IN ENDANGERED SPECIES OF WILD FAUNA AND FLORA Seventieth meeting of the Standing Committee Rosa Khutor, Sochi (Russian Federation),

More information

China Approach to Combat the Wildlife Trafficking Wan Ziming Coordinator China s National Inter-agency CITES Enforcement Coordination Group (NICECG)

China Approach to Combat the Wildlife Trafficking Wan Ziming Coordinator China s National Inter-agency CITES Enforcement Coordination Group (NICECG) 中国的野生动植物保护管理及履约执法工作 China Approach to Combat the Wildlife Trafficking Wan Ziming Coordinator China s National Inter-agency CITES Enforcement Coordination Group (NICECG) LEGISLATION China s Criminal Law

More information

WHY WE ARE REVIEWING THE ACT

WHY WE ARE REVIEWING THE ACT WHY WE ARE REVIEWING THE ACT In this section we summarise Customs current role and why we believe new legislation is needed to enable us to respond and adapt effectively to new technologies, business practices

More information

Original language: English SC70 Doc. 11 CONVENTION ON INTERNATIONAL TRADE IN ENDANGERED SPECIES OF WILD FAUNA AND FLORA

Original language: English SC70 Doc. 11 CONVENTION ON INTERNATIONAL TRADE IN ENDANGERED SPECIES OF WILD FAUNA AND FLORA Original language: English SC70 Doc. 11 CONVENTION ON INTERNATIONAL TRADE IN ENDANGERED SPECIES OF WILD FAUNA AND FLORA Seventieth meeting of the Standing Committee Rosa Khutor, Sochi (Russian Federation),

More information

Practical Guidelines: Sharing Information with Law Enforcement

Practical Guidelines: Sharing Information with Law Enforcement Practical Guidelines: Sharing Information with Law Enforcement DISCLAIMER This publication may be reproduced in whole or in part and in any form to support capacity building and training of law enforcement

More information

Improving the border agency cooperation among the OIC member states for facilitating trade

Improving the border agency cooperation among the OIC member states for facilitating trade Improving the border agency cooperation among the OIC member states for facilitating trade Dr. Juha Hintsa Cross-border Research Association Lausanne, Switzerland Ankara, Turkey, 6 October 2016 Part 1:

More information

CONVENTION ON INTERNATIONAL TRADE IN ENDANGERED SPECIES OF WILD FAUNA AND FLORA

CONVENTION ON INTERNATIONAL TRADE IN ENDANGERED SPECIES OF WILD FAUNA AND FLORA (English only / Únicamente en inglés / Seulement en anglais) CONVENTION ON INTERNATIONAL TRADE IN ENDANGERED SPECIES OF WILD FAUNA AND FLORA Sixty-fifth meeting of the Standing Committee Geneva (Switzerland),

More information

AFGHAN OPIATES TRAFFICKING

AFGHAN OPIATES TRAFFICKING AFGHAN OPIATES TRAFFICKING THROUGH THE SOUTHERN ROUTE March 2014 Afghan Opiate Trade Project Statistics And Surveys Section Afghan Opiate Trade Project (AOTP) Main Objectives: Global threat/risk and response

More information

SEG: Trafficking session

SEG: Trafficking session SEG: Trafficking session General overview of: - CITES Convention. - Recent trade history: Ripple effects of biodiversity loss. - Real data enhance trade. - European Action against trafficking: operations

More information

Original language: English SC65 Doc. 38 CONVENTION ON INTERNATIONAL TRADE IN ENDANGERED SPECIES OF WILD FAUNA AND FLORA

Original language: English SC65 Doc. 38 CONVENTION ON INTERNATIONAL TRADE IN ENDANGERED SPECIES OF WILD FAUNA AND FLORA Original language: English SC65 Doc. 38 CONVENTION ON INTERNATIONAL TRADE IN ENDANGERED SPECIES OF WILD FAUNA AND FLORA Sixty-fifth meeting of the Standing Committee Geneva (Switzerland), 7-11 July 2014

More information

Global Report on Trafficking in Persons. Bali Process Senior Officials Meeting Brisbane, Australia February 2009

Global Report on Trafficking in Persons. Bali Process Senior Officials Meeting Brisbane, Australia February 2009 Global Report on Trafficking in Persons Bali Process Senior Officials Meeting Brisbane, Australia 24-25 February 2009 REPORT OBJECTIVES 1. ASSESS IMPACT OF PALERMO PROTOCOL Government responses one decade

More information

Original language: English SC70 Sum. 6 (03/10/18) CONVENTION ON INTERNATIONAL TRADE IN ENDANGERED SPECIES OF WILD FAUNA AND FLORA

Original language: English SC70 Sum. 6 (03/10/18) CONVENTION ON INTERNATIONAL TRADE IN ENDANGERED SPECIES OF WILD FAUNA AND FLORA Original language: English SC70 Sum. 6 (03/10/18) CONVENTION ON INTERNATIONAL TRADE IN ENDANGERED SPECIES OF WILD FAUNA AND FLORA Seventieth meeting of the Standing Committee Rosa Khutor, Sochi (Russian

More information

THE ELEPHANT TRADE INFORMATION SYSTEM (ETIS) AND THE ILLICIT TRADE IN IVORY. T. Milliken, R.W. Burn and L. Sangalakula. TRAFFIC East/Southern Africa *

THE ELEPHANT TRADE INFORMATION SYSTEM (ETIS) AND THE ILLICIT TRADE IN IVORY. T. Milliken, R.W. Burn and L. Sangalakula. TRAFFIC East/Southern Africa * Introduction CoP15 Doc. 44.1 Annex (English only / únicamente en inglés / seulement en anglais) THE ELEPHANT TRADE INFORMATION SYSTEM (ETIS) AND THE ILLICIT TRADE IN IVORY T. Milliken, R.W. Burn and L.

More information

COLLABORATION AND COORDINATION EFFORTS IN COMBATTING WILDLIFE CRIME: A KENYAN PROSECUTORIAL PERSPECTIVE

COLLABORATION AND COORDINATION EFFORTS IN COMBATTING WILDLIFE CRIME: A KENYAN PROSECUTORIAL PERSPECTIVE COLLABORATION AND COORDINATION EFFORTS IN COMBATTING WILDLIFE CRIME: A KENYAN PROSECUTORIAL PERSPECTIVE Presentation By Gikui Gichuhi Prosecution counsel Office of the Director of Pubic Prosecution (ODPP)

More information

Charting Singapore s Economy, 1Q 2016 Publication Date: December 8 th, 2015 Number of pages: 58

Charting Singapore s Economy, 1Q 2016 Publication Date: December 8 th, 2015 Number of pages: 58 Charting Singapore s Economy, 1Q 2016 Publication Date: December 8 th, 2015 Number of pages: 58 Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International (CC BY-NC-ND 4.0) You are free to: Share copy and

More information

Species Survival Network Bear Working Group

Species Survival Network Bear Working Group Species Survival Network Bear Working Group Briefing Document for the 45 th Meeting of the CITES Standing Committee 19 22 June 2001 Paris, France John White Concerning SC45 Doc. 21 Conservation of and

More information

TRAFFIC Recommendations on selected Agenda Items for the 15 th Meeting of the Conference of the Parties to CITES

TRAFFIC Recommendations on selected Agenda Items for the 15 th Meeting of the Conference of the Parties to CITES TRAFFIC Recommendations on selected Agenda Items for the 15 th Meeting of the Conference of the Parties to CITES Strategic matters Scientific committees 7.2.1. Animals Committee: Report of the Chair Most

More information

Criminal justice response to wildlife crime in Malaysia. A rapid assessment

Criminal justice response to wildlife crime in Malaysia. A rapid assessment Criminal justice response to wildlife crime in Malaysia A rapid assessment Copyright United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime, October 2017. Cover photo: Seizures of pangolin scales in Malaysia, August

More information

SPECIALIZED TECHNICAL COMMITTEE ON AGRICULTURE, RURAL DEVELOPMENT, WATER AND EVIRONEMENT

SPECIALIZED TECHNICAL COMMITTEE ON AGRICULTURE, RURAL DEVELOPMENT, WATER AND EVIRONEMENT SPECIALIZED TECHNICAL COMMITTEE ON AGRICULTURE, RURAL DEVELOPMENT, WATER AND EVIRONEMENT PARALLEL SESSION B: ENVIRONMENT, CLIMATE CHANGE, WATER AND LAND MANAGEMENT CONSERVATION OF AFRICA S WILD FAUNA AND

More information

7. The Group welcomes the theme for this Congress, entitled: Integrating Crime prevention and criminal justice into the wider United Nations agenda to

7. The Group welcomes the theme for this Congress, entitled: Integrating Crime prevention and criminal justice into the wider United Nations agenda to Statement of the G-77 and China during the 13th UN Congress on Crime Prevention and Criminal Justice, Doha, Qatar, 12-19 April 2015 - delivered by H.E. Ambassador Evandro DE SAMPAIO DIDONET, Permanent

More information

BRIEFING: MANDATE AND ACTIVTIES DIRECTORATE FOR PRIORITY CRIME INVESTIGATION(DPCI): 17 SEPTEMBER 2014

BRIEFING: MANDATE AND ACTIVTIES DIRECTORATE FOR PRIORITY CRIME INVESTIGATION(DPCI): 17 SEPTEMBER 2014 BRIEFING: MANDATE AND ACTIVTIES DIRECTORATE FOR PRIORITY CRIME INVESTIGATION(DPCI): 17 SEPTEMBER 2014 OUTLINE OF THE PRESENTATION INTRODUCTION BACKGROUND MANDATE DECLARED PRIORITIES DPCI OPERATING MODEL

More information

UNODC Activities in Support of the Bali Process

UNODC Activities in Support of the Bali Process UNODC Activities in Support of the Bali Process Bali Process Ad Hoc Group Senior Officials Meeting Sydney, 12 October 2011 Sebastian Baumeister UNODC Regional Centre for East Asia and the Pacific Overview

More information

e-borders: Friends of Presidency Group meeting Brussels

e-borders: Friends of Presidency Group meeting Brussels e-borders: Friends of Presidency Group meeting Brussels Tim Rymer Head of Joint Border Operations Centre Border & Immigration Agency 27 March 2008 Friends of Presidency group: PNR History and setting up

More information

CONVENTION ON INTERNATIONAL TRADE IN ENDANGERED SPECIES OF WILD FAUNA AND FLORA

CONVENTION ON INTERNATIONAL TRADE IN ENDANGERED SPECIES OF WILD FAUNA AND FLORA CONVENTION ON INTERNATIONAL TRADE IN ENDANGERED SPECIES OF WILD FAUNA AND FLORA CoP15 Com. II Rec. 7 (Rev. 1) Fifteenth meeting of the Conference of the Parties Doha (Qatar), 13-25 March 2010 Summary record

More information

TRAFFIC REDUCED TO SKIN AND BONES RE-EXAMINED: FULL ANALYSIS. An analysis of Tiger seizures from 13 range countries from

TRAFFIC REDUCED TO SKIN AND BONES RE-EXAMINED: FULL ANALYSIS. An analysis of Tiger seizures from 13 range countries from TRAFFIC R E P O R T NOVEMBER 2016 REDUCED TO SKIN AND BONES RE-EXAMINED: FULL ANALYSIS An analysis of Tiger seizures from 13 range countries from 2000-2015 Sarah Stoner, Kanitha Krishnasamy, Talia Wittmann,

More information

United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC) (May 2014-April 2015)

United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC) (May 2014-April 2015) United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC) (May 2014-April 2015) UNODC assists the African Union in the implementation of its Drug Control Plan 2013-2018. UNODC has expanded its cooperation with

More information

GLOBAL PARTNERSHIP IN THE EU ACTION PLAN AGAINST WILDLIFE TRAFFICKING. Presentation delivered by UNEP on Thursday, 8th September 2016

GLOBAL PARTNERSHIP IN THE EU ACTION PLAN AGAINST WILDLIFE TRAFFICKING. Presentation delivered by UNEP on Thursday, 8th September 2016 GLOBAL PARTNERSHIP IN THE EU ACTION PLAN AGAINST WILDLIFE TRAFFICKING Presentation delivered by UNEP on Thursday, 8th September 2016 CONTEXT: SCALE OF IWT An estimated 170 tonnes of ivory was illegally

More information

RECORD Twentieth Annual Stetson International Environmental Moot Court Competition

RECORD Twentieth Annual Stetson International Environmental Moot Court Competition Questions Relating to Cultural Property and the Protection of Elephants (Federal States of Aliya/Republic of Rincossi) RECORD Twentieth Annual Stetson International Environmental Moot Court Competition

More information

EXECUTIVE COUNCIL Twenty-Seventh Ordinary Session 7 12 June, 2015 Johannesburg, South Africa EX.CL/910(XVII)

EXECUTIVE COUNCIL Twenty-Seventh Ordinary Session 7 12 June, 2015 Johannesburg, South Africa EX.CL/910(XVII) AFRICAN UNION UNION AFRICAINE UNIÃO AFRICANA Addis Ababa, ETHIOPIA P. O. Box 3243 Telephone : 517 700 Fax : 5130 36 website : www. au.int EXECUTIVE COUNCIL Twenty-Seventh Ordinary Session 7 12 June, 2015

More information

Ⅲ. LAW ENFORCEMENT AT THE BORDER AGAINST ILLICIT DRUGS AND OTHER ILLEGAL ITEMS. ( 1 ) Meeting for the Promotion of Measures to Prevent Drug Abuse

Ⅲ. LAW ENFORCEMENT AT THE BORDER AGAINST ILLICIT DRUGS AND OTHER ILLEGAL ITEMS. ( 1 ) Meeting for the Promotion of Measures to Prevent Drug Abuse Ⅲ. LAW ENFORCEMENT AT THE BORDER AGAINST ILLICIT DRUGS AND OTHER ILLEGAL ITEMS 1. Government Initiatives ( 1 ) Meeting for the Promotion of Measures to Prevent Drug Abuse In January 1997, the Headquarters

More information

Terms of Reference. Programme Formulation Joint Programme of Support to Combat Poaching & Illegal Wildlife Trafficking

Terms of Reference. Programme Formulation Joint Programme of Support to Combat Poaching & Illegal Wildlife Trafficking Terms of Reference Programme Formulation Joint Programme of Support to Combat Poaching & Illegal Wildlife Trafficking Type of contract: Individual Contract (International) Starting date: August 2013 Duration

More information

A Review of Wildlife Crime Court Cases in Malawi

A Review of Wildlife Crime Court Cases in Malawi A Review of Wildlife Crime Court Cases in Malawi 2010-2017 A technical report produced on behalf of the Department of National Parks & Wildlife of Malawi Authors: Victoria May 1, Laure Barthau 1, Susan

More information

Coversheet: Interdicting drug shipments in international waters

Coversheet: Interdicting drug shipments in international waters Coversheet: Interdicting drug shipments in international waters Advising agencies Decision sought Proposing Ministers New Zealand Customs Service Agree to implement a domestic legislative framework for

More information

IUCN response to public consultation "EU approach against Wildlife Trafficking"

IUCN response to public consultation EU approach against Wildlife Trafficking IUCN response to public consultation "EU approach against Wildlife Trafficking" IUCN welcomes the opportunity to share its views on the EC Communication EU approach against Wildlife Trafficking. The IUCN

More information

Cairns Airport financial year passenger totals.

Cairns Airport financial year passenger totals. Cairns Airport financial year passenger totals. FY2005 Jul 2004 389,426 39,425 36,587 76,012 135,133 137,283 272,416 40,998 Aug 2004 387,617 37,727 43,392 81,119 132,192 135,417 267,609 38,889 Sep 2004

More information

ICAO AVIATION SECURITY GLOBAL RISK CONTEXT STATEMENT. (Extract)

ICAO AVIATION SECURITY GLOBAL RISK CONTEXT STATEMENT. (Extract) Page 1 of 6 ICAO AVIATION SECURITY GLOBAL RISK CONTEXT STATEMENT (Extract) INTRODUCTION The continuing threat of terrorism is most effectively managed by identifying, understanding and addressing the potential

More information

G20 High Level Principles on Combatting Corruption Related to Illegal Trade in Wildlife and Wildlife Products

G20 High Level Principles on Combatting Corruption Related to Illegal Trade in Wildlife and Wildlife Products Annex to G20 Leaders Declaration G20 High Level Principles on Combatting Corruption Related to Illegal Trade in Wildlife and Wildlife Products In the Implementation Plan for the G20 Anti-Corruption Action

More information

SOUTH-EAST ASIA. A sprightly 83 year-old lady displaced by Typhoon Haiyan collects blankets for her family in Lilioan Barangay, Philippines

SOUTH-EAST ASIA. A sprightly 83 year-old lady displaced by Typhoon Haiyan collects blankets for her family in Lilioan Barangay, Philippines SOUTH-EAST ASIA 2013 GLOBAL REPORT Bangladesh Brunei Darussalam Cambodia Indonesia Lao People s Democratic Republic Malaysia Myanmar Philippines Singapore Thailand Timor-Leste Viet Nam A sprightly 83 year-old

More information